Pachelbel: Canon in D Major: Original Full Version for Organ*** Pachelbel :This deeply romantic and haunting Canon composition by Pachelbel is played on Technics Electronic Organ by TV Fashion Model and Amateur Musician - Miss Denise Hewitt *** *** Denise is wearing a beautiful Silky Deep Blue Evening Dress from the Pollyanna Boutique for the performance of the Canon or Kanon in D Major by talented Composer Pachelbel *** *** Californian Poppies photographed by Denise on Pacific Highway Rte-1 at San Simeon ***

Canon in D Major Fingerstyle Classic Guitar Arrangementthis is a piece called Canon in Re Major (D major), composed by Johan Pachelbel and arranged to classic guitar masterfully by Jason Waldron. It's the best arrangement for Canon im familliar with so i chose to play this. I haven't practiced it enough to play it perfect but theres only few flays. I played it with a Capo on the second fret but note that its not nessecary, it's just sounds better with a capo in my opinion. About tabs, I learnt to play this from a Jason Waldron sheet music book called "popular classics vol 2", it also appears at "fingerpicking classics vol 2". as i mentioned its a sheet music and not tabs, and if you want to learn to play it you can buy one of Jason books i mentioned earlier from his site: www.jasonwaldron-guitarist.com.au or from a music books shop. you can also purchase it via Amazon, Barnes and Noble etc. I hope you've enjoyed !!!

Pachelbel Angay Canon & Gigue In(Piano)(Stereo Hi-Fi Gold Remaster) Pachelbel Angay Canon & Gigue In(Piano) Sound : 24bit-96khz Stereo Hi-Fi Gold Remaster Introduction : Pachelbel's Canon, also known as Canon in D major (PWC 37, T. 337, PC 358), is the most famous piece of music by German Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel. It was originally scored for three violins and basso continuo and paired with a gigue in the same key. Like most other works by Pachelbel and other pre-1700 composers, the Canon remained forgotten for centuries and was rediscovered only in the 20th century. Several decades after it was first published in 1919, the piece became extremely popular, and today it is frequently played at weddings and included on classical music compilations, along with other famous Baroque pieces such as Air on the G String by Johann Sebastian Bach.

Kunuk - Canon in D on classical guitar - with tabsTuning DADGBE Played by Kunuk Nykjaer Tabs available at guitar.kunuk.dk with information on how to play with both fingers Content --------------- 0 Intro 0:11 Tabs 3:19 Power chords 3:42 Bossa Nova --------------- Composer: Johann Pachelbel en.wikipedia.org Remember to see the Pachelbel rant if you haven't, pretty funny www.youtube.com please comment and rate! ---- Trivia: Normally it is PIMA, Guitar pro shows TIMA, thats why I annotate the right fingers as TIMA Trivia: The chord play at top right is a loop, it repeats playing D, A, Bm, F#m, G, D, G, A Trivia: Tabs from the Internet, I modified the start A chord and added right hand annotation Trivia: The flower is home grown, we ate the avocados and used the avocado stones as seeds Software used for this video: - Video editing (Corel VideoStudio) - Sheets display program (Guitar pro 5) - Sheets video recording (Camtasia) - Sound editing (GoldWave)

Pachelbel Canon in D major - jean-francois paillard chamber orchestrPachelbel's Canon, also known as Canon in D major (Kanon und Gigue für 3 Violinen mit Generalbaß in German) (PWC 37, T. 337, PC 358), is the most famous piece of music by German Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel. It was originally scored for three violins and basso continuo and paired with a gigue in the same key. Like most other works by Pachelbel and other pre-1700 composers, the Canon remained forgotten for centuries and was rediscovered only in the 20th century. Several decades after it was first published in 1919, the piece became extremely popular, and today it is frequently played at weddings and included on classical music compilations, along with other famous Baroque pieces such as Air on the G String by Johann Sebastian Bach. Read more from: en.wikipedia.org